One of the most exquisite single family homes in the region is now on the market. Built in 1891, the 6,127 SF Greek Revival mansion features 5 bedrooms, 3 full and 2 partial baths. This exquisite home serves up a chef’s kitchen, as well as a secluded upper terrace and tantalizing pool area. There’s also a 2-car attached garage.
The presence of a “For Sale” sign on the lawn has already attracted plenty of gawkers who have been snapping photos from the sidewalk. After all, it’s not every day that a home of this magnitude hits the market. In recent years, the owner rented it out as a one-of-a-kind Airbnb experience. That said, it still functions as a private residence, and appears to be in magnificent shape.
From the listing:
Over a century ago, one of the country’s first breakfast cereal titans built himself a home worthy of the Gilded Age. It’s six thousand square feet of brick and walnut and marble, rising up on the corner of Norwood Avenue and Summer Street like a declaration, like a monument built not just for a cereal baron but for the ages. Step through the enormous wood front door and understand immediately that craftsmanship is a word that has been cheapened, degraded, run through the modern mill and spat out as a marketing term. Here it means something. The walnut floors in the living room. The marble in the foyer. The moldings in the dining room, climbing the walls in their plaster splendor.
The house has lived many lives in its 124 years – private mansion, music school, speech clinic, private mansion again-cycling through Buffalo’s own century of boom and retrenchment and renaissance, never falling backwards and standing exactly where Ellsworth planted it, on this tree-lined street in the Elmwood Village, immovable, unapologetic, magnificent. Five bedrooms. Three full bathrooms and two half bathrooms. A chef’s kitchen of serious scale. A grand living room with a pool table and a fireplace and enough space for all your friends and family. A terrace. An in-ground pool and hot tub. And outside, the Elmwood Village – the restaurants, the shops, Kleinhan’s with its symphonies by Mozart and Brahms and the AGK with its de Koonings and its Rothkos – all of it walkable, all of it there, humming away just outside the thick, expertly-laid brick walls. They are not building houses like this anymore. But occasionally, one does get offered for sale…